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North started taking piano lessons around age 8. In passing, she mentions she picked up the guitar, too. She doesn’t get to play as much music these days. The lacrosse field now suffices as her primary canvass for expression.
While Walker-Weinstein has watched that creativity in person enough recently to gain a thorough appreciation, she is not sure what forces conspired to leave North off their recruiting radar in the first place. “I’m ashamed,” Walker-Weinstein said. “I missed her.”
A lot of coaches did. Despite North’s credentials (two-time US Lacrosse All-American, four-time all-conference honoree and ESD team MVP), she did not commit to Duke until the spring of her junior year. In a 2018 US Lacrosse Magazine article, Duke coach Kerstin Kimel referred to North as a “last-spot kid.”
“If you aren’t recruited out of the gate or super early, that doesn’t mean you can’t be an excellent player at the college level,” Kimel said.
North proved that point. She scored 59 goals as a freshman in 2018 and led Duke in 2019 with 105 points on 82 goals and 23 assists. Boston College, however, held North to one goal in the two games against Duke during which the Eagles face-guarded her. Walker-Weinstein estimated North forced the coaching staff to do 20 extra hours of film review.
On May 30, 2019, North entered the transfer portal. She said she needed to reevaluate what was the best fit for her. It was four days after Boston College finished as NCAA runner-up for the third straight year. Walker-Weinstein resolved not to make the same mistake.
“I’m not going to miss this kid again,” Walker-Weinstein told herself. “She’s a generational player.”
Walker-Weinstein was the first coach to contact North. They FaceTimed. Even over the phone, North could feel Walker-Weinstein’s passion. After talking with some of her future teammates on a campus visit, North said it seemed like they would run through a brick wall for each other.
“I believe that love wins,” Walker-Weinstein said.
She also believes that there are a few players that have transcended the game because of some factor, like stick work or deception or athleticism. There’s Jen Adams, of course. There’s Treanor and Sam Apuzzo, who are on the BC staff. Katrina Dowd, Michelle Tumolo, Dempsey Arsenault, Kenzie Kent and Lindsey Munday also come to mind. North called getting the email to try out for the U.S. national team with many of them a “surreal dream.”
“We all look to them as heroes of our game,” Walker-Weinstein said. “I do believe that Charlotte is a part of that group.”
North led Boston College in goals (23) and assists (12) through seven games in 2020. She’s already registered 14 goals, many of them highlight reel worthy, in three games this season. Beyond that, Walker-Weinstein said, North, Hall and Bridget Simmons, who transferred from Albany in 2019, have helped foster a different mentality at BC. Most of the teams she has coached had a serious disposition that produced a hard-to-match intensity at practice. The current team takes a different tact.
Why can’t you take your work seriously and have fun along the way? That dynamic is most visible after North or one of her teammates score. Her post-goal reactions range somewhere between a Tiger Woods fist pump and Megan Rapinoe in the World Cup.
Still, Walker-Weinstein said what makes North and Hall unique is their ability to be light and fun without losing their intensity. They lugged a black ION block speaker to the final Maroon and Gold scrimmage but want nothing more than to outduel each other in 3, 2, 1 practice scenarios that replicate game-on-the-line situations. They can joke about it afterward.
Whenever Hall goes back home to Texas and talks with her younger sister’s friends, the trick shot goal often surfaces again. “I’m like, ‘OK guys, yeah, I’m the one who got scored on,’” Hall said. “But it was a sick shot, so it’s cool.”
The same way Treanor and Tumolo inspired North to try to replicate their moves in the backyard, North now acts as a North Star for the next wave of talent. She’s encouraged every time she returns home to see the improvement in play or when she hears about another Division I commit from Texas. Her favorite part about the life the trick shot has taken on is when she gets tagged in posts by younger players attempting to copy it.
When North wasn’t training with Browne or watching the PLL Championship Series over the summer, she was coaching. That included her younger brother, Kevin, 8, who she wants to help become the next big thing in Texas lacrosse, but also GRIT Lacrosse and Bridge Lacrosse. The latter, part of the US Lacrosse Urban Lacrosse Alliance, focuses on providing access to the sport for under-resourced and urban communities of North Texas.
North, who said that Koch “totally changed my life,” would like to do the same for others. Carcaterra saw that influence in person around the holidays when he shot around with North and his daughter Peyla, who is in the fifth grade.
“Charlotte wants to make herself an ambassador for the game,” Carcaterra said. “Her overall love of the game will fuel the next generation because she’ll be available for them.”
In other words, she wants to spread the love.
“I’m very proud to be from Texas,” North said. “I hope to be someone that people can look up to and know that no matter where you’re coming from — if there’s not a lot of lacrosse, if it’s not a hotbed, if you feel like you’re struggling to get looked at — it’s still possible and there are ways to do it.”